TU TOUCHE LA FEMME
to touch a woman is to touch the world
Healthy Births begin the promise of Human Design carrying the potential of positive change for all.
Tu Touche La Femme (TTLF) is a relief work project designed to bring health-care, prenatal, birth, and postnatal education to support the most vulnerable Haitian citizens, pregnant mothers and their newborn babies. TTLF will partner with Haitian Traditional Birth Attendants (TBAs) in the Joseph community to train them to use safe, effective, and simple modalities to insure the health and safety of mothers and their newborns.
Our design comes from the inspiration and reflection on the human condition. Haiti is a unique and special section of culture. And while we know there is nothing more important than the safe birth of our children, we also know there is no country in greater need than Haiti.
Blueprint: Prior to the earthquake, Haiti had some of greatest health care and poverty challenges of any country in the world. Families survive on less than a dollar per day, making it difficult to afford health care.
In rural Haiti, only 9% of women give birth in the hospital. A study by the WHO shows 80% of women gave birth at home, the majority with a TBA. In most cultures, including Haiti, TBAs are often mothers who, having been at their own births, start helping their neighbors. They have no formal training; techniques and practices get passed down from one TBA to the next. Haiti has an infant mortality rate as high as 29%; many of these deaths are preventable.
By supporting TTLF in designing an educational program for Traditional Birth Attendants (TBAs) and expecting mothers these outcomes can be improved.
Construct: While volunteering in Haiti, we were deeply moved by the work happening in the Joseph Community (JC). They are a community with few resources and a strong vision. Following the January earthquake, they welcomed 2,500 refugees. Dedicated to their own sustainability, their goals include building a school, community garden, and improved birth success stories.
Studies show it is important that programs designed to enhance birth experiences and outcomes do not detract from traditional birth practices.
The Grant for Change would support the foundation for this seed project. TTLF will be designing a program where TBAs can relearn methods lost, as well as learn important, basic, life saving techniques that rely minimally on medical equipment, will improve the quality of life for infants and mothers as well as reduce infant and maternal mortality rates.
Execution: In addition to supporting the general health and well-being of babies and new mothers, research shows that low-cost educational programs for TBAs are greatly effective in reducing stillbirths and increasing positive childbirth outcomes.
TTLFs project will impact the Joseph community directly. It will involve a two-week training and education course for TBAs and mothers. Education of the TBAs will be the primary focus. A follow-up course will be scheduled to reassess, provide further training, and replenish kits and medical supplies.
Additionally, this project will be photographed in order to inspire broader outreach and future funding.
Materials: Specifically, this grant would help cover training materials, project documentation, basic prenatal supplies, and the creation of birth-kits for the TBAs including: tools to reduce infection rate, newborn resuscitation masks, and hand-held scales to assess newborns' birth-weight. Additionally, the Grant for Change would cover costs of our photojournalist. TTLF recognizes that part of the sustainability of a program is motivating the public. Visual impact is key to spreading awareness and inspiration.
Outcome: The Grant for Change would help us bring change to Haiti. By improving the skills of the TBAs we empower these women to improve the birth outcomes for their neighbors, families, and children. Safer birth practices in the home has direct impact on the reduction of infant and maternal mortality rates.
With this Design we birth, sustain and pass forward the knowledge and experience of one culture to another, one woman to another; in the aftermath of the earthquake, birth celebrates the hope a future generation will bring.
There is nothing more important or basic in human evolution and design than the safe birth of your child and no country with greater need than Haiti.
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This nomination does not include video.
http://childbirth-midwifery.blogspot.com/
http://www.aishaharley.com/projects/Haiti_2010a/index.html
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Welcome to Nau's 2nd annual $10,000 Grant for Change.
After six weeks of open nominations, 124 nominees, an exciting voting period, support from hundreds of communities, interviews with our ten finalists, and much deliberation, we are excited to announce our second annual $10,000 Grant for Change Grantees:
Congratulations to Curt Ellis and Ian Cheney and their project Truck Farm.
All of the 124 nominees utilize design as a tool for positive change. Our nine Finalists bring specific aspects of design to the conversation table. Our Grantees bring design to your doorstep, and with it a humorous and edgy spin to the conversation around food.
Please, take a deeper look, and see what we are so excited about. We look forward to the upcoming year of storytelling, mobile farm movements and the urban agriculture conversation. We hope you will join the discussion.
Visit the ‘how it works' tab to learn more about this year's Grant for Change cycle. To view the other 114 nominees, click the ‘all nominees' tab.
We want to help launch the next big thing.
So who, or what, inspires us, as the current big thing?
Think Emily Pilloton, founder of Project H Design, a nonprofit made up of designers, architects, and builders engaging locally through partnerships with social service organizations, communities, and schools to improve the quality of life for the socially overlooked.
Think Kevin Farnham, David Lipkin and Christian Omania, founders and developers of TED.com, a web resource and conference itinerary devoted to Ideas Worth Spreading. TED started with the goal of bringing together people from Technology, Entertainment and Design industries. It now gives millions of knowledge-seekers around the globe direct access to the world's greatest thinkers and teachers.
Think Dr. Bernard Amadei, founder of Engineers Without Borders (EWB), an organization that manages over 350 engineering projects in over 45 developing countries around the world. EWB started in 2001 with a single trip to San Pablo, Belize, with the goal of bringing clean water to one community. Since then EWB has been harnessing the power of professional and student engineers to complete low-tech, high-impact projects in other developing countries.
Think Mark Gorton, Founder and Executive Director of OpenPlans, a social enterprise that builds software for forward-thinking civic agencies around the country, using an iterative, agile process, and nurturing the communities around the software. Their result is software as a public resource: technology that is widely available and that satisfies civic needs.
Think Eye Writer Project, an open source low-cost eye-tracking apparatus/software that allows paralyzed and handicapped artists to create art using only their eyes. Instigated and developed by Tony Quan, Evan Roth, Chris Sugrue, Zach Lieberman, Theo Watson and James Powderly, the Eye Writer re-defines the physical parameters of artistic movement.
Get the idea?
Here's how it works:
Step 1: Instigate change
The nomination platform was open from May 10th ‘til June 24th. We asked you to nominate your friends, or nominate yourself. You responded with gusto and we are wow'd by the results.
Step 2: Learn.
It's still an open process. Have a look at the other nominees. See what's happening across the country, or in your own back yard. Get inspired. Pass the stories on to your friends, so they can be inspired, too.
Step 3: Vote.
We wanted to know what you think. We asked you to vote for the nominee of your choice, and rally your people to do the same. You only got one vote but you could change your vote at any time, until July 6th.
Then we took the public's Top five, added them to our own Top five, et voila, we now have our top ten Finalists.
Step 4: Watch.
You gave us some time. The ten Finalists had a few weeks to tell us more about their work. As their stories rolled in, we passed them on to you.
Step 5: Hoo ha. (YOU ARE HERE)
We celebrate. Our grantees have been selected and we are going to throw a party in Portland for them in the fall. We hope you'll come.
Step 6: Track.
The G4C Grantee sticks with us for the next year. We become the soapbox, receiving updates on the effort, which we'll pass on to you via our newsletter, Off the Grid, and our blog, the Thought Kitchen.
Step 7: Restart.
Come this time next year, we'll do it again.
Why the Grant for Change? Why now? And why Nau?
Designing for positive change is at the core of who we are and what we do. Beauty, Performance and Sustainability are infused into every level of our product, our model for business, and how we interact with each other and the world.
With these elements we strive to be an effective agent for positive change, to inspire creative peers of all industries to design in a smarter, more sustainable way.
Beauty: A passion for the aesthetic in all things. We design for lasting beauty - product colors, details, and shapes are minimalist, modern, and timeless.
Performance: Meeting or exceeding an intended use. We design products that protect from the elements, and establish a visual tone that allows for multifaceted use - styles look as good on city streets as they perform well in the wild.
Sustainability: Balancing the triple bottom line of people, planet, and profit. We design for social, material, and aesthetic sustainability.
Every great movement begins with a voice. Given our driving vision for positive change; our ongoing conversation with a radical and inspiring collection of athletes, artists, and activists; and our position as a national brand with a nationwide reach, we can't help but want to crank up the voices that are calling for positive change, so they can call for that change with a little more boom.
We love our potent sliver of design friends and peers. They inspire us, collaborate with us, and challenge us to give our best. But we don't know every designer out there, and, more importantly, they don't always know about each other.
Acting as both a community organizer and a platform, we hope this year's Grant for Change will bring together the members of the design community who are working tirelessly, challenging assumptions about the way even the most basic things are done, using design to bring lasting, positive change to their communities.
Want to share the G4C with your community? Download any one of the following printables and help us spread the word.
-"Change" Poster: Low Res | High Res
We appreciate the publications, organizations, blogs and zines that help us spread the word about the Grant. As stories roll in, we will share them with you here.
Media links:
U.S. Marine Youth Physical Fitness Program